Plum City – (AbelDanger.net). United States Marine Field McConnell has linked the MI-3 Livery Companies to PF Moneypenny: a contract-hit role apparently built by Ian Fleming, Jack Profumo, Ewen Fergusson and Vera Atkins for the peg-house actors who allegedly ambushed JFK with the King’s Royal Rifle Corps and Pat Tillman with the Royal Green Jackets.

McConnell notes that during WWII, Vera Atkins played a PF Moneypenny role for the Special Operations Executive (SOE) section head, Maurice Buckmaster, with whom she appears to have entrapped and extorted female agents in peg houses operated by the MI-3 Innholders Livery Company and deployed hundreds of agents to France to be ambushed, tortured and murdered.

McConnell notes that after the war Atkins appears to have continued her PH Moneypenny collaboration with MI-3 spymaster William “Intrepid” Stephenson to establish a modern ambush method where alien contract killers – trained by the likes of the King’s Royal Rifle Corps or Royal Green Jackets – stay as short-term guests at MI-3 Innholders hotels while local peg-house staff set up the ambush, spin the stories at the crime scene and plant or take away evidence.

“In Ian Fleming‘s first draft of Casino Royale, Moneypenny’s name was originally “Miss ‘Petty’ Pettaval”, which was taken from Kathleen Pettigrew, the personal assistant to MI6 director Stewart Menzies. Fleming changed it to be less obvious.[1] Other candidates for Moneypenny’s inspiration include Vera Atkins of Special Operations Executive;[2]Paddy Ridsdale, a Naval Intelligence secretary;[1]; Joan Bright Astley, whom Fleming dated during World War II, and who was noted for giving a warm and friendly reception to senior officers who visited her office to view confidential papers [3] and Joan Howe, Fleming’s red-haired secretary at The Times who had typed the manuscript of Casino Royale. [4] The BBC has used the term “Fleming’s Miss Moneypenny” when referring to Jean Frampton, who typed out the manuscripts for Fleming’s later works and made plot suggestions to him, even though the two never met.[5][6]”

Atkins was given one of SOE’s most sensitive jobs – recruiting and deploying female agents. Recently controversy has arisen as to why clues that one of F section’s main spy networks had been penetrated by the Germans – F section being the section of the SOE in charge of operations in France – were not picked up, and Buckmaster and Atkins failed to pull out agents at risk. “Instead they sent in several more. A radio operator, Gilbert Norman, had sent a message omitting his security check – a deliberate mistake. So why did she not challenge Buckmaster when other signals from captured radios came in without checks?” Atkins let Buckmaster, ” repeat his errors at the expense of agents lives.” Her biographer Sarah Helm believes that Atkins, who still had relatives in Nazi occupied Europe, may have helped them escape by bribingAbwehr officials.[5]

When the allied victory in Europe was accomplished, she went to Germany. Her self-appointed mission was to investigate the fate of the 118 F section agents who had disappeared in enemy territory. She succeeded in every case except one.

“Colonel Maurice James BuckmasterOBE (11 January 1902 – 17 April 1992, Forest Row, Sussex) was the leader of the French section of Special Operations Executive and was awarded the Croix de Guerre. A 2012 TV series, “The Secret War” (see below) points to very serious failings on Buckmaster’s part that might fulfil the terms of either criminal negligence or criminal incompetence, as his inaction resulted in the torture and murder of hundreds of agents. This leads also to very serious questions about Buckmaster’s right to hold the Croix de Guerre. He was a corporate manager with the French branch of the Ford Motor Company, in the postwar years serving in Dagenham. He wrote two memoirs about his service with the Resistance during World War II.

Maurice Buckmaster was born on 11 January 1902 at Ravenhill, Brereton, Staffordshire, England. He was educated at Eton College, but his studies ended when his father went bankrupt. He left school and first became a reporter for the French paper Le Matin. Later he became a banker and eventually a senior manager with the French branch of the United States (US) Ford Motor Company.

When World War II started, Buckmaster returned to Great Britain. He joined the British Expeditionary Force and fought in France until the retreat to Dunkirk. Following this, he was an IO, (information officer), with 50 Division, which he decided to leave after the division was scheduled to move to the Middle East. Following a meeting with Gerald Templer, he was recruited into Special Operations Executive (SOE), or MO1(SP) and, as such, was gazetted by the War Office.

On 17 March 1941, Buckmaster was appointed the Information Officer of the French section of the SOE, and following an attachment to the Belgian Section from July 1941, in September he was made head of F Section. His job was to form an organisation to supply and train French Resistance members in occupied France and to gather intelligence. He was directly involved in the agent training and worked with the (communist) FTP. He had a habit of giving his agents personal gifts before they departed for their missions. For his service, France awarded him the Croix de Guerre, the Americans the Officer of the Legion of Merit and the British the OBE.

After the war, Buckmaster rejoined the Ford Motor Company, serving in Dagenham as Director of Public Affairs. In 1946 and 1947, he wrote a series of eight articles on F Section for the now defunct Chambers Magazine, entitled They Came By Parachute. He wrote two memoirs, Special Employed (1952) and They Fought Alone (1958), and was interviewed for the 1969 documentary The Sorrow and the Pity.

“The King’s Royal Rifle Corps was a British Armyinfantry regiment, originally raised in North America as the Royal Americans, and recruited from North American colonists. Later ranked as the 60th Regiment of Foot, the regiment served for more than 200 years throughout the British Empire. In 1966 the regiment amalgamated and became the 2nd Battalion The Royal Green Jackets.

One comment

JFK was ambushed by a group of several hundred participating, involving the Masons, Mormons, US Secret Service, and Dallas Police. I write about it in the San Diego Homeless News, Dec. 1 edition, at http://www.NZ9F.com/SDHN.